F I L E D
United States Court of Appeals
Tenth Circuit
July 26, 2006
PU BL ISH
Elisabeth A. Shumaker
UNITED STATES COURT O F APPEALS Clerk of Court
TENTH CIRCUIT
SCOTT JOHNSO N, as personal
representative of the estate of Graciela
Cano a/k/a Grace Lee Bogey,
deceased; and LORENA TORREZ,
Plaintiffs - Appellants,
v.
ANNE HOLM ES; BONNIE
VEH STEDT; KA REN ZARATE; No. 04-2286
LYD IA R . SAENZ; SONIA PEREZ;
V IRGIN IA V ILLA REA L; V IV IANE
EN CIN IAS; G IN G ER BO WM AN;
D EN ISE H . N A RV A EZ; C HILDREN,
YO UTH and FAM ILIES
DEPA RTM ENT, New M exico;
VERONICA BOGEY; TERRY
B OG EY a/k/a TER I B OG EY ,
Defendants - Appellees.
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the District of New M exico
(D.C. No. CIV-02-1239 JB/KBM )
Paul J. Kennedy (Adam S. Baker with him on the briefs), Kennedy & Han,
Albuquerque, New M exico, appearing for Plaintiffs-Appellants.
M ichael Dickman, Assistant Attorney General, Santa Fe, New M exico for
Defendant-Appellee, Children, Youth and Families Department, New M exico.
Randolph B. Felker, Felker, Ish, Hatcher, Ritchie, Sullivan & Geer, Santa Fe,
New M exico, appearing for Defendants-Appellees.
Timothy V. Flynn-O’Brien, Albuquerque, New M exico, appearing for
Defendants-Appellees.
Before LUC ER O, B AL DOC K , and M cCO NNELL, Circuit Judges.
L UC ER O, Circuit Judge.
This case is not much about grace; it is about Grace, a child born with
severe spina bifida. Grace was abandoned soon after birth to the custody of the
New M exico Children, Youth, and Families Department and placed with a foster
family. Over the foster family’s objection, the Children, Youth, and Families
Department allow ed V eronica Bogey to adopt Grace soon after Grace’s first
birthday. The basis of the foster family’s objection was that they thought Bogey
was actually a man pretending to be a woman because of Bogey’s extensive facial
hair. Veronica Bogey’s father – a self-described hermaphrodite who claims also
to be Veronica Bogey’s mother – then moved in. Responsibility for her case
bounced around from one over-worked social worker to another and concerns
about her situation were investigated by an uninquisitive investigator. Grace’s
situation quickly turned from muddled to tragic: she died four weeks after the
adoption was finalized, apparently as the result of being beaten to death.
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This case is legally about the claimed failures of the Children, Youth, and
Families Department (the “Department”) to properly discharge their custodial
obligations of investigation and oversight, particularly during the period between
placement for adoption and the time adoption decree was entered. The argument
is that, but for the failure of oversight by the Department during the months
leading up to the entry of the formal decree of adoption, the adoption would not
have been permitted and Grace would not have been placed in mortal danger.
Scott Johnson, as personal representative of the estate of the child, renamed
Grace Bogey at adoption, filed suit under state tort law and 42 U.S.C. § 1983
against the D epartment and a number of its employees. His state tort claims were
dismissed as a matter of law, his § 1983 claims against several Department
employees w ere dismissed on summary judgment, and a jury entered a verdict in
favor of two D epartment employees on his remaining claims. He now appeals,
arguing that: (1) sovereign immunity does not bar his state tort claims against the
Department and the Department employees; (2) the district court erred in granting
summary judgment to Virginia Villareal and Ginger Bowman, Department
employees responsible for monitoring Grace’s placement and an investigation into
child abuse allegations raised against the adoptive mother; and (3) the jury verdict
in favor of Anne Holmes and Sonia Perez Sanchez, two other Department
employees involved with the adoption, should be overturned because the jury
instructions improperly required a determination that their actions “shocked the
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conscience” in order to find that they violated the child’s substantive due process
rights.
Under New M exico law, it is clear that the State did not waive sovereign
immunity. The jury instructions used in the trials of H olmes and Perez w ere
clearly in accordance with our substantive due process jurisprudence. The district
court’s decision granting summary judgment to Bowman was also proper.
However, there are disputed questions of material fact as to whether Villareal
properly exercised her professional judgment by failing to investigate several
disturbing events that took place while she was the primary social worker
assigned to Grace’s case. W e conclude the district court’s dismissal of the claims
against the D epartment, its grant of summary judgment to Bowman, and the jury
verdicts in favor of Holmes and Perez should be AFFIRM ED. Grant of summary
judgment to Villareal, however, should be REVERSED and the case
REM AND ED to the district court for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
I
In 1997, Lorena Torrez gave birth to Graciela Cano a/k/a Grace Lee Bogey
(“Grace”). As noted, Grace was born with severe spina bifida and, because of her
special needs, Torrez soon proved unable to care for her. Torrez thus
relinquished all parental rights, whereupon the Department assumed legal custody
and began efforts to find adoptive parents. In the interim, Grace was placed with
foster parents Charlene and G raydon Blevins.
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The Department conducted several “home studies” in its efforts to find
permanent adoptive parents for G race, including one by Denise Narvaez, a
Department employee, of Veronica Bogey, a single schoolteacher previously
licensed by the Department as a qualified adoptive parent. Viviane Encinias, an
adoption consultant, forwarded the Bogey home study along with several other
home studies to Anne Holmes, a Department employee previously assigned as
Grace’s treatment worker.
Department officials decided to focus on Bogey and held a “matching
staffing” meeting to discuss Bogey as the potential adoptive parent and her ability
to care for G race. In attendance were Encinias, Holmes, Narvaez, Lydia Saenz, a
treatment supervisor, Sonia Perez, 1 the placement worker assigned to provide
post-placement services for G race, and Virginia Villareal, Perez’s supervisor. A t
the meeting, they decided that Bogey was a good match for Grace. An expert
hired by the personal representative described the process as having been
conducted in an “excessively hasty” manner.
The Department’s ultimate decision to place Grace with Bogey was not free
from hesitation and doubt. Holmes expressed concern that Bogey would not be
able to meet Grace’s needs because she was single. Charlene Blevins objected
because she believed Bogey appeared to be a man pretending to be a woman.
1
During the period at issue in this case, Perez was married and changed her
name to Sonia Sanchez. For the purposes of this opinion, she will be referred to
as Sonia Perez.
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Both of these worries were determined by the Department to be unfounded. The
Department then proceeded to the next steps required to permanently place Grace
with Bogey: a home inspection and “full disclosure,” during which Department
officers fully explained to Bogey the extent of Grace’s medical problems, and a
visit by Bogey with Grace in the foster home.
On completion of this process, the Department allowed preadoptive
placement with Bogey. Soon thereafter, Perez expressed concern that Bogey
would be overwhelmed by the responsibility of caring for a child with special
needs, and suggested that respite care might be appropriate. Despite this concern,
the Department proceeded without offering such assistance, but did provide a
monthly subsidy of $487 and agreed to cover medical expenses for any pre-
existing condition not covered by Bogey’s health insurance or M edicaid.
A fter placement, Perez, w ho was performing the responsibilities of two
social workers due to understaffing in the Department, assumed primary
responsibility for monitoring Grace’s progress. Although under Department
policy Perez w as expected to conduct monthly home visits, Perez visited B ogey’s
home but two or three times over the course of almost six months. Perez did,
however, monitor Grace’s progress in other ways. She saw Grace in the
Department’s offices on two or three occasions, once picked her up at a daycare
facility, and placed a number of phone calls to Bogey to discuss Grace’s progress.
Villareal also met with Grace during her visits to the Department’s offices.
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During the preadoptive placement, a nurse, Kerstin Lagestam, was hired to
conduct check-ups on G race. During her first visit to Bogey’s home, Nurse
Lagestam noticed swelling and a large purple bruise on the left side of G race’s
face. Bogey explained that she accidently bumped Grace’s face on the side of a
car door.
Nurse Lagestam then began to visit Grace once each day at her day care
facility. Several months after she started, Nurse Lagestam noticed marks on
Grace’s neck, back, and abdomen. Considering the marks to be intentionally-
inflicted fingernail scratches deep enough to leave scars, Nurse Lagestam reported
the injuries to her supervisor, Janie M ealand, who proceeded to call Holmes at the
Department. Holmes was unavailable and, a few days later, Nurse Lagestam
noticed that Grace’s right hand was bruised and swollen. She promptly reported
this to M ealand as w ell.
M ealand did not hear from Holmes for several days. W hen Holmes
eventually returned her call, she told M ealand to call Sonia Perez. M ealand did
so on M arch 22, 2000, and two days later, Perez told M ealand to call the
Department’s abuse hotline. Immediately after she heard from Perez, M ealand
called the hotline: It was M arch 24. She did not hear back from the Department
for two weeks, at which point, she called the hotline again. This time, she was
told that Perez would call her back. Another week passed before Perez returned
her call.
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The bureaucratic morass at the Department did not only impede its ability
to return phone calls; the actual investigation into the abuse allegations was
stalled as well. Although M ealand had first contacted Department officials about
the reported abuse much earlier, the Department did not begin its investigation
until the call to the hotline was made on M arch 24. Bogey left for a vacation the
next day, M arch 25. Although Perez and the D epartment’s abuse investigator,
Ginger Bowman, attempted to contact Bogey before she went on vacation and left
a phone message, they were not able to reach her.
W hen Bogey returned from vacation on April 3, she called Perez, who told
Bogey about the allegations and explained that allegations of this sort are
frequently unsubstantiated. Bogey responded by saying that Grace tends to get
bruises that do not heal quickly when crawling and that the pet ferret belonging to
Bogey’s father may have scratched Grace.
W hen Perez and Bowman finally conducted the required home visit
following abuse allegations, Bowman examined Grace and determined that there
was no evidence of physical abuse. Grace’s shins were bruised, but Bowman
noted that this is common among children like Grace who lack feeling in their
lower extremities. According to Bowman, Grace seemed attached to Bogey and
did not flinch when Bogey approached. Bogey told Bowman that any scratches or
bruises were probably the result of contact with other children at day care or from
incidental contact with rings that Bogey wears.
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After this investigation, Bowman told Villareal and Perez that there was no
evidence of abuse. She did not, however, prepare a contemporaneously written
report, nor did she explain to either co-worker what she had observed. Perez
offered Bogey respite care, but Bogey declined. Bowman did not contact any
third party to ask about the abuse allegations.
Two months later, Perez quit her job at the Department. Because of the
lack of available staffing at the Department, Villareal assumed the entirety of
Perez’s double caseload, as well as keeping her supervisory responsibilities. For
the next two months, Villareal was the primary social worker assigned to G race’s
case. During this period, substantial changes occurred in the Bogey home. First,
Bogey’s father, Terry Bogey, moved in. Villareal did not know that Terry Bogey
was going to move in, although she did know that Bogey planned to move, along
with Grace, to W isconsin after the adoption became final in order to be closer to
her father. Second, Bogey removed Grace from daycare and fired her home
health nurses, leaving Grace entirely cut off from any contact with the outside
world. Villareal neither investigated Terry Bogey nor the decision to remove
Grace from outside contact. Despite the upheaval in Grace’s life, Villareal did
not visit Bogey’s home once during this period
Following a hearing in Children’s Court, Bogey’s adoption of Grace was
finalized on July 31, 2000. Both the abuse allegations and Bowman’s report that
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determined the allegations as being without merit were provided to the Children’s
Court and Grace’s guardian ad litem before the finalization of the adoption.
Little more than one month later, Bogey brought Grace to a hospital
emergency room because she was congested and could not breathe. Grace died
soon after. On admission, hospital personnel determined that Grace’s death was
the result of child abuse. An autopsy report concluded that Grace died of
craniocerebral blunt force, and noted that there was evidence of serious injuries to
Grace’s head, neck, torso, and extremities. Grace’s arm was also broken.
Autopsy timing of the break was placed as likely having occurred several weeks
prior to Grace’s death. Fingernail scratches of recent origin were identified on
Grace’s arm, as were scars on Grace’s abdomen and lower back.
The personal representative for G race’s estate sued Bogey and her father, a
number of Department employees – Perez, Villareal, Bowman, Holmes, Saenez,
Encinias, K aren Zarate, and B onnie Vehstedt – and the Department itself. 2 He
claimed that the defendants violated the New M exico Torts Claims Act
(“NM TCA”) and the federal Adoption Assistance and Child W elfare Act
2
Although it is not in the record, at oral argument it was revealed that
Johnson’s status as personal representative has been the subject of much
litigation. He was appointed by a state court on the request of an attorney for
Grace’s birth mother, Lorena Torrez, and Lorena Torrez’s children, who now
represents Johnson before this court. The propriety of appointing Johnson as
personal representative is on appeal in state court. Torrez and Torrez’s children
are also attempting to recover from Grace’s estate in parallel litigation in state
court.
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(“AACW A”). He also filed a claim under § 1983 for violations of the substantive
component of the Due Process Clause against the Department employees and the
Bogeys.
In response to a 12(b)(6) motion, the district court dismissed the NM TCA
and AACW A claims against all defendants. The district court also dismissed the
§ 1983 claims against Bogey and her father because they were not state actors. It
declined to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over the state law claims against
the Bogeys.
The district court then granted summary judgment on the § 1983 claims for
Bowman, Encinias, Narvaez, Saenz, Vehstedt, Villareal, and Zarate on qualified
immunity grounds. Claims against H olmes and Perez, however, proceeded to
trial, and a jury returned a verdict in their favor.
The personal representative now appeals, arguing that the district court (1)
improperly dismissed on the pleadings the claims brought under the NM TCA; (2)
utilized improper jury instructions for the trial of Perez and Holmes; and (3)
improperly granted summary judgment to Bowman and Villareal.
II
Below, the state tort claims against the Department, a N ew M exico state
agency, and the Department employees w ere dismissed because the defendants
were protected by sovereign immunity. This determination was erroneous, the
personal representative argues, because the “building waiver” clause in the
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NM TCA expressly waives sovereign immunity in these circumstances. He is
mistaken. Because New M exico does not have a duty to engage in the day-to-day
“operation” of Bogey’s house or the provision of care to Grace, the “buildings
waiver” does not apply. Sovereign immunity thus bars the personal
representative’s state tort law claims against the Department and the individual
defendants.
W e review a district court’s grant of a motion to dismiss de novo. Sutton
v. Utah State Sch. For D eaf and Blind, 173 F.3d 1226, 1236 (10th Cir. 1999).
The New M exico Tort Claims A ct does not provide a cause of action for all
negligent behavior engaged in by State employees. Instead, it seeks to balance
the need to limit governmental liability and the desire to compensate those injured
by the negligence of State employees by creating a general immunity from tort
liability for the State and State employees with certain, limited exceptions. Cobos
v. Dona Ana County Hous. Auth., 970 P.2d 1143, 1145 (N .M . 1998).
One exception is the so-called “building waiver” exception, which states.
The immunity granted pursuant to Subsection A of Section 41-4-4
NM SA 1978 does not apply to liability for damages resulting from
bodily injury, wrongful death or property damage caused by the
negligence of public employees w hile acting within the scope of their
duties in the operation or maintenance of any building, public park,
machinery, equipment or furnishings.
N.M . Stat. Ann. § 41-4-6 (emphasis added).
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Because the Department had the responsibility to provide oversight over
Grace’s care by Bogey, it is urged, the State had responsibility to maintain and
operate Bogey’s home. The New M exico Supreme Court has interpreted the
phrase “operation and maintenance” in § 41-4-6 somewhat broadly; it is not
“limited [in] its applicability strictly to defects in the physical building.” Upton
v. Clovis M un. Sch. Dist., 115 P.3d 795, 797 (N.M . Ct. App. 2005). Nor is it
limited to buildings owned by the government. Cobos, 970 P.2d at 1146-47.
Instead, courts must examine the “scope of the duties” performed by public
employees to operate or maintain the building in question. Id. W hen public
employees have a duty to operate or maintain a structure, the state is liable if the
negligent actions of the public employees pose a danger to the “general public.”
Espinoza v. Town of Taos, 905 P.2d 718, 721 (N.M . 1995). However, claims
based on a public employee’s duty to inspect and supervise do not fall within the
“building waiver” exception. Cobos, 970 P.2d at 1149.
This is not an issue of first impression; New M exico courts have considered
similar facts twice before. In M .D.R. v. State ex rel. Human Servs. Dep’t, 836
P.2d 106, 109 (N.M . Ct. App. 1992), the New M exico Court of Appeals held the
Department did not “operate” a foster home under the NM TCA by virtue of
placing a child in the home. Judge M izner wrote a concurring opinion noting
that, although the Department did not operate the foster home by making the
placement decision, under some circumstances the Department could “operate” a
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foster home because it engages in extensive “supervision of actual day-to-day
operation.” Id. at 111. 3
In Young v. Van Duyne, 92 P.3d 1269 (N.M . Ct. App. 2004), the Court of
Appeals seized upon this distinction made in Judge M izner’s concurrence. It held
that the “building waiver” exception applied when the state placed an extremely
violent young man in a foster home and the young man killed one of the foster
parents. The court found that the waiver applied because the state’s extensive
role in regulating foster homes amounted to “control over the . . . home as a
licensed foster home.” Id. at 1276. The holding in Young rested on the
extensive role the state plays in regulating and operating foster homes.
Before us, the personal representative’s claim that the Department operated
and maintained Bogey’s home takes two forms. First, he argues that the State’s
regulation of adoptive homes before the adoption is final is akin to the State’s
regulation of foster homes, and that, therefore, Young applies. This argument is
flawed because the State’s treatment of adoptive homes is substantially different
from its treatment of foster homes. Under the NM TCA, foster parents are “public
employees,” and hence the “operation” of their home is by the State. N.M . Stat.
Ann. § 41-4-3(F)(4). New M exico regulations make clear that, although foster
parents are private citizens, they play a public role when they take in foster
3
Judge M izner’s concurring opinion did not have any binding precedential
effect. However, the New M exico Court of Appeals has since relied on its
reasoning.
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children. 4 “The foster parent is a member of the child’s case management team
and, as a team member, participates in the development and implementation of
team plans and may participate in conferences, citizen review boards, judicial
reviews, individual education plans, etc. Foster parents do not make independent
plans for children in their care.” N .M . Admin. Code § 8.27.2.19(C) (emphasis
added). Instead, “foster parents cooperate w ith and carry out the [Department]
plans for the child.” Id. Further, the State directly controls day-to-day parenting
in foster homes. For instance, State regulations specifically require foster
children to be assigned household chores, id. § 8.27.3.22, and foster parents are
forbidden from making negative comments about the foster children’s birth
parents. N.M . Admin. Code § 8.27.3.25. New M exico regulations also
specifically regulate the buildings in which foster parents live. See id.
§§ 8.27.2.15; 8.27.3.11; N.M . Stat. A nn. § 40-7a-4(D ).
There are no similar regulations of putative parents before adoptions are
made final. Adoptive parents are investigated by the State and their progress is
monitored by the State, but they are not considered public employees nor is their
day-to-day conduct as parents regulated and controlled by the State. In light of
4
State regulations suggest that foster parents are effectively state officials,
at least for some purposes. Foster parents are screened, trained, studied, approved
and licensed by the state. N .M . Admin. Code § 8.27.2.13. See also N.M . Stat.
Ann. §§ 32(A)-1-4(G); 40-7A-4(B). Licenses must be renewed each year and
applicants must meet stringent and extensive requirements for serving as a foster
parent as well as undergoing annual training. N.M . Admin. Code § 8.27.2.13; see
also N.M . Admin. Code §§ 8.27.2.19; 8.27.3.12.
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the highly unusual facts of Young and the tension between its analysis and that in
M .D.R., we are not persuaded that New M exico precedent treats everything that
happens within a foster home as within the building waiver exception. But even
accepting that premise for sake of argument, we conclude that the reasoning of
Young does not extend to adoptive homes. The State does not play anywhere
near as extensive a role in adoptive homes as it does in foster homes.
Secondly, the personal representative argues that the Department failed to
sufficiently investigate and report the allegation of child abuse. The Department
does have a duty to investigate and report on whether there has been successful
integration of the family, whether there were needs for social services, and
whether there were instances of child abuse. This, however, is not “day-to-day
operation” of the home. New M exico courts have been clear that a duty to
regulate and investigate violations does not constitute “operation” of a facility
under the NM TCA. See, e.g., Caillouette v. Hercules, Inc., 827 P.2d 1306, 1312-
13 (N.M . Ct. App. 1992) (holding that the State did not “operate” within the
meaning of the NM TCA a truck containing explosives that was inspected by state
police officer following a crash because “the use of the words ‘operation’ and
‘maintenance’ . . . indicates an intent not to extend liability to all activities
supervised or inspected by the state.”); Owens v. Leavitts Freight Serv., Inc., 745
P.2d 1165, 1168 (N.M . Ct. App. 1987) (“The design, planning and enforcement of
safety rules for school bus transportation do not fall within the meaning of
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‘operation’ of a motor vehicle.”); cf. Cobos, 970 P.2d at 1149 (finding the State
did operate a private building used as a housing project because the “D efendants’
duties in this case do not arise as a consequence of the general regulatory
relationship between the government and its citizens.”).
Neither the Department nor its employees “operated” Bogey’s home and
they are therefore protected by sovereign immunity against the personal
representative’s tort claims. Dismissal of these claims should be affirmed.
III
The personal representative also appeals the jury’s verdict that Holmes and
Perez did not violate Grace’s rights under the substantive component of the Due
Process Clause. He claims that the jury instructions for their trial misstated the
applicable law by requiring the jury to find that their actions “shocked the
conscience.” Therefore, the personal representative claims, the jury’s verdict
should be reversed. This claim is meritless; the jury instructions were a correct
statement of applicable law.
Because the personal representative failed to object to the jury instructions
at trial, we review only for plain error. Greene v. Safeway Stores, Inc., 210 F.3d
1237, 1245 (10th Cir. 2000). “Under that standard, we will affirm unless the
instructions w ere ‘patently, plainly erroneous and prejudicial.’” Id. (quoting Unit
Drilling Co. v. Enron Oil & Gas Co., 108 F.3d 1186, 1190 (10th Cir. 1997)).
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The § 1983 claims against Holmes and Perez allege violations of G race’s
substantive due process rights under the Fourteenth Amendment. Generally, state
actors are liable under the Due Process Clause only for their own actions and not
the actions of private citizens. Ulhrig v. Harder, 64 F.3d 567, 572 (10th Cir.
1995). There are two exceptions to this rule. State officials may be subject to
constitutional liability if they: (1) create a danger that results in a harm to an
individual, even if that harm is not ultimately inflicted by a state official; or (2) if
the state has a “special relationship” with the individual who is harmed by the
third party. Id. Both the “danger creation” and the “special relationship”
theories of liability were advanced at trial. The district court instructed the jury
that the personal representative w as required to prove that the defendants’
conduct “shocked the conscience” to recover under either theory.
On appeal, the personal representative argues that a “shocks the
conscience” test only applies to “danger creation” claims and does not apply to
“special relationship” claims. This argument is directly precluded by our
precedent. In Radecki v. Barela, we held:
It is true, of course, that state actors are generally only liable under
the Due Process Clause for their own acts and not private violence.
There are, however, two exceptions to that rule. First, the state may
be subject to constitutional liability if it does not perform a duty to
provide protection to an individual with whom the state has a special
relationship because it has assumed control over that individual, such
as in a prison. Second, the state may be constitutionally liable if it
creates a danger that results in harm to an individual, even if that
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harm is ultimately inflicted by a private party. The shocks the
conscience standard applies to both types of suits.
146 F.3d 1227, 1230 (10th Cir. 1998) (internal citations and quotation marks
omitted) (emphasis added). The jury instruction correctly stated the law and there
is no reason to reverse the jury verdicts in favor of Holmes and Perez.
IV
Appeal of the district court’s grant of summary judgment favoring Villareal
and Bowman on qualified immunity grounds is predicated on the claim that the
district court improperly resolved factual disputes and improperly drew inferences
in favor of Bowman and Villareal. The undisputed facts show that Bowman
exercised her professional judgment in her investigation of abuse allegations and,
thus, did not violate Grace’s substantive due process rights. There are, however,
genuine issues of material fact as to whether Villareal exercised her professional
judgment by failing to investigate several suspicious events during the period she
was the D epartment employee directly responsible for Grace. Hence, we affirm
the grant of summary judgment for Bowman, but reverse the grant of summary
judgment for Villareal.
W e review a grant of summary judgment on the basis of qualified immunity
de novo. Jiron v. City of Lakew ood, 392 F.3d 410, 413-14 (10th Cir. 2004).
Summary judgment is appropriate if the pleadings, depositions, answ ers to
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interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show
that there is no genuine issue of material fact and one party is entitled to
judgment as a matter of law . Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c). W e must construe the record
in the light most favorable to the non-moving party. Id.
In order to defeat a qualified immunity defense, “a plaintiff must show that
(1) the official violated a constitutional or statutory right; and (2) the
constitutional or statutory right was clearly established when the alleged violation
occurred.” M imics, Inc. v. Village of A ngel Fire, 394 F.3d 836, 841 (10th Cir.
2005) (internal citations and quotation marks omitted). “W e must first determine
if a constitutional right was violated because in the course of determining whether
a constitutional right was violated on the premises alleged, a court might find it
necessary to set forth principles which will become the basis for a holding that a
right is clearly established.” H arman v. Pollock, 446 F.3d 1069, 1077 (10th Cir.
2006) (internal quotation marks omitted). In this case, the parties agree that the
allegations are based on clearly established law . Thus, the only question for us to
decide is whether there is a genuine question of material fact as to whether
Bow man or Villareal violated G race’s substantive due process rights.
As noted above, state officials are generally not responsible for the actions
of third parties under the substantive component of the Due Process Clause.
DeShaney v. W innebago County Dept. of Social Servs., 489 U.S. 189, 201 (1989).
They, however, can be held liable for harm done by third parties if the state has a
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“special relationship” with the harmed individual. A “special relationship . . .
exists when the state assumes control over an individual sufficient to trigger an
affirmative duty to provide protection to that individual . . . .” Id. at 199-200. In
Yvonne L. v. New M exico D ep’t of H uman Serv., 959 F.2d 883 (10th Cir. 1992),
we held that the state has a special relationship w ith children in state custody. If
the state or its employees “knew of the asserted danger to [minor children in state
custody] or failed to exercise professional judgment with respect thereto . . . and
if an affirmative link to the injuries [the children] suffered can be shown, then
[the state or its employees] violated plaintiffs’ constitutional rights.” Id. at 890.
W e noted that the standard used in Yvonne L., “failure to exercise professional
judgment,” requires more than mere negligence: it requires an abdication of
professional responsibility. Id. at 894. Such abdication must be sufficient to
shock the conscience. Cf. Radecki, 146 F.3d at 1230. Both Bowman and
Villareal concede that the state had a special relationship with Grace, but argue
that their conduct did not violate the Fourteenth Amendment.
Bowman
Two bases are advanced in support of the contention that summary
judgment should not be granted to Bowman. First, the personal representative
argues that a genuine question of material fact exists as to whether the
investigation of the abuse allegation violated Grace’s rights, given the delay in
initiating the investigation and the decision by Perez to notify Bogey in advance
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that an investigator was coming. Second, he claims that a genuine dispute of
material facts exists as to whether Bowman employed professional judgment in
conducting her investigation because Bowman reported that there was no
evidence that Grace had been abused, despite evidence indicating otherwise, and
did not contact any third parties after meeting with Bogey to discuss the abuse
allegations.
Regarding the first contention, there is no evidence that Bowman was
responsible for the delay in the investigation. Perez and Holmes were the
officials responsible and the personal representative’s claims against them went to
trial. Further, it was Perez who notified Bogey about the abuse allegations. This
contention – that the delay and early notification of Bogey by Perez and Holmes
may form the basis of a claim that Bowman violated Grace’s Fourteenth
Amendment rights – was properly rejected.
As for the second contention, our review of the record reveals that there are
no disputed questions of material fact. There is clear, uncontradicted evidence
that Bowman thoroughly examined Grace’s body during her visit to Bogey’s
home and, in her professional judgment, determined there was no abuse. No facts
were advanced that contradict this clear evidence. Instead, the personal
representative attempts to indict Bow man’s judgment by noting that Nurse
Lagestam found intentionally-inflicted fingernails scratches on Grace’s neck,
back, and abdomen during her examination of Grace that Bowman did not find.
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He also claims that the autopsy revealed that fingernail scratches on Grace’s back
and neck were apparent when Bowman performed her examination. However, the
autopsy states that the scratches were “consistent with recent injury,” and the
autopsy took place months after Bow man’s investigation. Because the autopsy
report does not show what the personal representative claims it does, there
remains no evidence that Bow man missed something in her investigation; Nurse
Lagestam determined Grace had been abused weeks before Bowman conducted
her examination. This claim thus distills to the assertion Lagestam found
evidence of abuse and Bow man did not. That two professionals both conducted
an investigation and simply disagreed about a diagnosis is not proof, in and of
itself, that either professional has abandoned her professional judgment.
It is clearly correct that Bowman failed to call Nurse Lagestam or any other
third party following her investigation. But no evidence is advanced that
establishes that failing to do so is “such a substantial departure from accepted
professional judgment, practice or standards as to demonstrate that the person
responsible actually did not base the decision on such a judgment.” Youngberg v.
Romero, 457 U.S. 307, 323 (1982). In order to create a question of material fact
as to whether Bowman’s decision not to call a secondary source violated the
Fourteenth Amendment, the personal representative must establish that this
failure was a substantial departure from accepted professional judgment, practice,
or standards. The only evidence the personal representative points to is a report
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by Alvin Sallee, an expert witness, who expressed an opinion that the
Department’s behavior as a whole during the investigation, including Bowman’s
failure to call a third party, was grossly negligent. Given the deferential standard
of review we employ under Youngberg, this does not provide the type of
particularized evidence necessary to create a dispute of material fact as to whether
the failure to contact outside sources was an impermissible deviation from
professional judgment. 5 Summary judgment as to this defendant was thus proper.
Villareal
Under a “special relationship” theory, the personal representative argues
that Villareal violated Grace’s substantive due process rights by failing to
exercise professional judgment in: (1) deciding to place Grace in Bogey’s home;
(2) loosely supervising Perez w hen she w as the social worker assigned to G race’s
case; and (3) failing to investigate the arrival of Bogey’s father, Terry Bogey, and
the decision by Bogey to withdraw Grace from all contact with the outside world
when she was the social worker w ith sole responsibility for G race’s case.
There is no merit to the claims relating to the placement decision or
Villareal’s oversight of Perez. Villareal did not decide to place Grace with Bogey
on her own: she acted on the advice of the Department’s adoption consultant,
5
Further, Bowman explained that her failure to make the calls was a result
of a staffing problem at the Department. A failure to satisfy professional
standards can be excused, under certain circumstances, because of budgetary
constraints. Youngberg, 457 U.S. at 323. Because there is no evidence that her
conduct fell below professional standards, we need not address this argument.
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Viviane Encinias, and as part of a Department committee. Only two Department
employees expressed any doubts about Bogey’s fitness as an adoptive parent:
Perez and H olmes both noted that they were somewhat worried that Bogey, as a
single mother, might have trouble meeting Grace’s needs. That Villareal, along
with others at the Department, decided to go ahead and place Grace with Bogey in
the face of such mild doubts does not constitute a failure to exercise professional
judgement. Further, the personal representative’s claim that Villareal violated
Grace’s constitutional rights by improperly supervising Sonia Perez is precluded
by the jury’s finding that Perez did not violate Grace’s constitutional rights.
Jiron, 392 F.3d at 419 (holding that a finding that an officer did not violate a
plaintiff’s constitutional rights meant that the officer’s supervisor could not be
held liable for deficient supervision).
However, there is merit to the personal representative’s argument that there
are disputed questions of fact as to whether Villareal exercised her professional
judgment after Perez left the Department. After Perez resigned, Villareal was
solely responsible for Grace’s case. During this period, Bogey removed G race
from day care and fired her home health nurses. Then, Terry Bogey moved in to
Bogey’s home, and Bogey did not inform the Department. Villareal did not
investigate any of these circumstances and, over a two-month span, did not make
a single visit to Bogey’s house or inquire into these matters. According to the
personal representative’s expert witness, Sallee, this was an abandonment of
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professional judgment. Whether V illareal exercised professional judgment in
concluding that the events were not of concern is a disputed question of material
fact and is inappropriate for resolution on summary judgment.
Villareal argues that extreme short-staffing at the D epartment is the cause
of any failures on her part during this period. Undisputed testimony shows that
Villareal was both covering the large number of cases Perez left behind and
serving as a supervisor to other social workers. The Supreme Court has stated
that, “[i]n an action for damages against a professional in his individual capacity,
however, the professional will not be liable if he was unable to satisfy his normal
professional standards because of budgetary constraints; in such a situation,
good-faith immunity would bar liability.” Youngberg, 457 U.S. at 323.
However, Villareal does not present evidence that budgetary problems at the
Department caused her complete failure to investigate. Existence of budgetary
problems is not an automatic free pass for unprofessional behavior, and the record
is not clear about whether Villareal’s workload, and not some less benign
explanation, made her unable to investigate the questionable situation in Bogey’s
home. Summary judgment on this issue was therefore inappropriate. 6
6
A substantive due process claim rooted in a “danger creation” theory is
also advanced on appeal. The “danger creation” theory is another exception to
the rule from DeShaney that state officials cannot be held responsible under the
substantive due process clause for the actions of third parties. Liebson v. New
M exico Corrections Dep’t, 73 F.3d 274, 276 (10th Cir. 1996). “[A] state may
also be liable for an individual’s safety if it created the danger that harmed the
(continued...)
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IV
W e A FFIR M the district court’s dismissal of the state tort claims against
the Department and Department employees on sovereign immunity grounds.
Further, we AFFIRM the jury verdicts in favor of Holmes and Perez and the
6
(...continued)
individual. Id. In C urrier v. D oran, 242 F.3d 905, 919 (10th Cir. 2001), we
applied the “danger creation” doctrine to child placements by the very agency
involved in this case, the Children, Youth and Families Department. W e held that
Department officials can be held responsible under the substantive component of
the Due Process Clause for creating danger to children by engaging in such
reckless conscious disregard for risk when placing them in a home that it shocks
the conscience. To establish liability under a “danger creation” theory, a plaintiff
must prove that “(1) the charged state entity and the charged individual actors
created the danger or increased plaintiff’s vulnerability to the danger in some
way; (2) plaintiff was a member of a limited and specifically definable group; (3)
defendant’s conduct put plaintiff at substantial risk of serious, immediate, and
proximate harm; (4) the risk was obvious or known; (5) defendant acted
recklessly in conscious disregard of that risk; and (6) such conduct, when viewed
in total, is conscience shocking.” Id. at 918. In Currier, a Department official
failed to investigate numerous allegations of severe abuse before placement and
we held that the failure to do so could meet these requirements and thereby
violate a child’s substantive due process rights. Id. at 924.
The “danger creation” claim in this case does not meet the requirements
laid out in Currier. The personal representative argues that Villareal failed to
properly investigate Bogey before recommending to the Children’s Court that the
adoption be finalized, and thereby created the danger that led to Grace’s death.
However, there is no allegation that the risk of abuse to Grace was obvious or
known, as is required for a danger creation claim, because it is undisputed that
Villareal relied upon Bowman’s determination that the abuse allegation was
unsubstantiated. W ithout proving the existence of a “obvious or known” risk,
such as the uninvestigated abuse allegation in Currier, a danger creation claim
cannot survive. Therefore, the district court rightly granted summary judgment as
to this claim.
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grant of summary judgment to Bowman. However, the grant of summary
judgment to Villareal was improper because there are disputed questions of
material fact relating to the period in which she was the Department employee
directly responsible for Grace prior to the adoption. W ith respect to that claim
only, we REV ER SE the district court and REM AND for further proceedings
consistent with this opinion.
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